Literature DB >> 32032720

Hospital Variation in Geriatric Surgical Safety for Emergency Operation.

Robert D Becher1, Nitin Sukumar2, Michael P DeWane3, Marilyn J Stolar2, Thomas M Gill4, Kevin M Schuster3, Adrian A Maung3, Cheryl K Zogg3, Kimberly A Davis3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The American College of Surgeons maintains that surgical care in the US has not reached optimal safety and quality. This can be driven partially by higher-risk, emergency operations in geriatric patients. We therefore sought to answer 2 questions: First, to what degree does standardized postoperative mortality vary in hospitals performing nonelective operations in geriatric patients? Second, can the differences in hospital-based mortality be explained by patient-, operative-, and hospital-level characteristics among outlier institutions? STUDY
DESIGN: Patients 65 years and older who underwent 1 of 8 common emergency general surgery operations were identified using the California State Inpatient Database (2010 to 2011). Expected mortality was obtained from hierarchical, Bayesian mixed-effects logistic regression models. A risk-adjusted hospital-level standardized mortality ratio (SMR) was calculated from observed-to-expected in-hospital deaths. "Outlier" hospitals had an SMR 80% CI that did not cross the mean SMR of 1.0. High-mortality (SMR >1.0) and low-mortality (SMR <1.0) outliers were compared.
RESULTS: We included 24,207 patients from 107 hospitals. SMRs varied widely, from 2.3 (highest) to 0.3 (lowest). Eleven hospitals (10.3%) were poor-performing high-SMR outliers, and 10 hospitals (9.3%) were exceptional-performing low-SMR outliers. SMR was 3 times worse in the high-SMR compared with the low-SMR group (1.7 vs 0.6; p < 0.001). Patient-, operation-, and hospital-level characteristics were equivalent among outlier-hospitals.
CONCLUSIONS: Significant hospital variation exists in standardized mortality after common general surgery operations done emergently in older patients. More than 10% of institutions have substantial excess mortality. These findings confirm that the safety of emergency operation in geriatric patients can be significantly improved by decreasing the wide variability in mortality outcomes.
Copyright © 2020 American College of Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32032720      PMCID: PMC7409563          DOI: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2019.10.018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Coll Surg        ISSN: 1072-7515            Impact factor:   6.113


  19 in total

1.  The aging population and its impact on the surgery workforce.

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2.  Ranking hospitals on surgical quality: does risk-adjustment always matter?

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Review 4.  Understanding and reducing variation in surgical mortality.

Authors:  John D Birkmeyer; Justin B Dimick
Journal:  Annu Rev Med       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 13.739

5.  The Hospital Compare mortality model and the volume-outcome relationship.

Authors:  Jeffrey H Silber; Paul R Rosenbaum; Tanguy J Brachet; Richard N Ross; Laura J Bressler; Orit Even-Shoshan; Scott A Lorch; Kevin G Volpp
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2010-10       Impact factor: 3.402

6.  Functional Trajectories Before and After Major Surgery in Older Adults.

Authors:  Hans F Stabenau; Robert D Becher; Evelyne A Gahbauer; Linda Leo-Summers; Heather G Allore; Thomas M Gill
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 12.969

7.  National estimates of predictors of outcomes for emergency general surgery.

Authors:  Adil Aijaz Shah; Adil Hussain Haider; Cheryl K Zogg; Diane A Schwartz; Elliott R Haut; Syed Nabeel Zafar; Eric B Schneider; Catherine G Velopulos; Shahid Shafi; Hasnain Zafar; David T Efron
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8.  Relationship between hospital readmission and mortality rates for patients hospitalized with acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, or pneumonia.

Authors:  Harlan M Krumholz; Zhenqiu Lin; Patricia S Keenan; Jersey Chen; Joseph S Ross; Elizabeth E Drye; Susannah M Bernheim; Yun Wang; Elizabeth H Bradley; Lein F Han; Sharon-Lise T Normand
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2013-02-13       Impact factor: 56.272

9.  Advancing age and 30-day adverse outcomes after nonemergent general surgeries.

Authors:  Csaba Gajdos; Deidre Kile; Mary T Hawn; Emily Finlayson; William G Henderson; Thomas N Robinson
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10.  Factors predicting mortality in emergency abdominal surgery in the elderly.

Authors:  Naoto Fukuda; Joji Wada; Michio Niki; Yasuyuki Sugiyama; Hiroyuki Mushiake
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